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http://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2009nl/may/healing.htm

 

A Starch-based Diet Supports Spontaneous Healing:

Atherosclerosis, Arthritis, and Sometimes Cancer

 

"I (Robert Cross, attorney from Sacramento, California) had a

follow-up radioactive heart scan done today, May 5, 2009, and an

appointment with the cardiologist immediately afterwards to discuss

the results. My last such test had been in January of 2008. That one

had shown a large region of mild-to-moderate perfusion deficit

extending along the inferior and lateral walls of my heart. I had

experienced chest pain early on in the treadmill portion of this test,

and had had difficulty getting to the 85% of predicted maximum heart

rate for my age of 62. My doctor had recommended medication, an

angiogram, and heart surgery (an angioplasty). I was scared. I

immediately went on the low-fat, starch-based diet.

 

" From almost the day I started the program, I have had no chest

pain, even with exercise. I am off my cholesterol meds and my "bad"

LDL cholesterol has dropped from 212 mg/dL to 60 mg/dL. I am off my

blood pressure medications, and today I was 110/75 mmHg. I also

stopped my diabetes medications and my last hemoglobin A1c was normal

(around 6.0%). I feel WAY BETTER in every way I can think of. But I

was nervous about what today's test would show.

 

" Today, during the radioactive heart scan, I had no pain on the

treadmill, even though I took my heart rate to 160 beats per minute,

which is over my predicted maximum-and I knew I had more in me. The

large deficit that showed last time was completely gone. There was

remaining only a small deficit that would now be classified as minor.

The doctor would not go so far as to say that the results were normal,

but he did say that they were only mildly abnormal. I could see that

he was working hard to say that it was not normal-he does not want

me to be feeling too confident (don't worry, I won't be celebrating

with a milk shake). My doctor and I agreed, without question that the

reversal was large and obvious, and I am so pleased with that."

 

Let's Begin with A Colossal Example of Spontaneous Healing

 

As a medical doctor, I (John McDougall) have had a chance to witness

the power of spontaneous (self-generated, arising from a natural

inclination) healing thousands of times; but nothing has been more

impressive than the recovery that follows massive trauma. During my

early training years, working at Queen's Medical Center in Hawaii, a

young man mangled in a motorcycle accident arrived through the

emergency room doors one evening. His splintered femur bone

stuck through the flesh of his left thigh, a 12-inch long gash across

his left forearm was streaming bright red blood, and the skin on his

left cheek and forehead had been scraped off during his slide across

the pavement only minutes before his arrival. X-rays showed his skull

was fractured and many ribs were broken. I thought, "How could he

ever survive?" Medical intervention was crucial-his bones were

straightened and his wounds cleaned and sewn. However, without

his body's innate abilities to repair this massive damage, all would

have been lost.

 

Moments after his motorcycle accident his body had begun the healing

processes. Platelets and blood clotting proteins activated,

coagulating his blood and plugging millions of leaking vessels. During

the following hours inflammatory cells (commonly called white blood

cells) migrated into his open wounds, defending them against

infection. Fluids collected within his torn flesh and around the

broken bones. The swelling of his thigh, arm, and face would last for

weeks. Pain kept him still, preventing movements that could

cause further injuries. Soon restoration of the damaged tissues began

with the laying down of new structural materials by cells known as

fibroblasts in the soft tissues and osteoblasts in the broken bones.

Over months replicator cells produced new muscle, skin, bone, and

scars, and remodeled his wounds to cause his body to look and function

as close to normal as possible.

 

Within a week he was walking on crutches. Ten days post-accident the

stitches were removed from his thigh and arm. The swelling and redness

surrounding his wounds took four weeks to fully subside. Six weeks

after the accident the coagulated blood (scabs) fell off his face

revealing pink skin with new hair follicles filling in his beard.

The broken ribs were stable and painless after seven weeks. Three

months after this near-death experience he was walking on his own

without a limp. Most of the pain was gone, but the memories were

fresh. He sold his motorcycle in order to avoid a repeat of this

experience.

 

His transition from broken, bleeding, and dying to health in three

months was nothing short of a miracle. I reasoned then, and I know for

sure now, that if a body can heal after these kinds of massive

injuries, then, given a chance, it can heal from most any

illness-even serious chronic illnesses, like heart disease, arthritis,

and sometimes cancers, that have plagued my patients for years.

 

The Secret to Recovery: Stop the Repeated Injuries

 

The example above was due to a force like a single blast from a

sledgehammer; whereas the people I care for, those with chronic

disease, can be thought of as suffering from thousands of "micro

pinprick" injuries to their arteries, joints, and all other tissues

over prolonged periods of time. Even though the force, frequency, and

means of impact differ; the mechanisms of repair are still the same,

whether the injuries occur once or a million times.

 

If your health is getting worse it is not because your body is failing

you-efforts to heal never stop-not for a moment. The reason for

your continued decline is because the damage is ongoing. For disease

to progress, injury must outpace healing. Reversing disease is

simply a matter of turning this scenario around. To be specific,

stop the ongoing injury, which is usually self-induced.

(However, there is a point reached where disease is irreversible,

because the injury is too severe and/or the body is too worn out to

recover. Fortunately, few of my patients are in that much

trouble.)

 

Let's consider some familiar examples of self-induced injuries and

the body's efforts to heal. A cigarette smoker inhales toxic

gaseous particles 20 and more times a day. With each puff, the lungs

become more irritated and inflamed. They fight back by coughing and

producing mucous in order to remove the poisons. Because of the

addictive properties of the tobacco, the injury continues hour after

hour, day after day, year after year. Eventually, the some of

the red, swollen lung dies and is replaced by non-functioning scar

tissues. The result is diminished lung capacity (emphysema).

Chronic inflammation can also lay the foundation for lung cancer.

Serious lung disease is not inevitable. Many smokers gain wisdom and

strength, and are able to quit injuring themselves before the damage

is irreversible-the lungs heal and breathing recovers. Toxic

damage to the liver by alcohol, and overexposure of the skin to excess

sunlight are other everyday examples of chronic injuries due to unwise

behaviors. In these cases also, the body responds with efforts to

heal, beginning with inflammation. Greater recovery is expected the

sooner the repeated injury is stopped.

 

A Starch-based Diet Supports Spontaneous Healing

 

Over 75% of the chronic illnesses in developed countries are due to

repeated injuries from the fork and spoon. Three and more times

a day damaging quantities of fat, protein, cholesterol, and chemicals

are ingested at the "dinner table"-better known these days as

the "bag of fast food." The beef, chicken, cheese, refined

flours, and sugars are sources of present day malnutrition-excesses

and deficiencies of vital nutrients plague these foods.

 

Replacement with starch corrects the malnutrition with a perfect

balance of fats, proteins, carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals, fibers,

phytates, and other phytochemicals that support the body's powers to

heal and stay healthy. Rice, corn, potatoes, sweet potatoes, and beans

are also devoid of injurious substances: dietary cholesterol, harmful

(saturated and trans) fats, chemical toxins, allergy-inducing

proteins, and much more.

 

Blood Tests Show Signs of Inflammation

 

There is much discussion these days in the scientific journals and the

lay press about inflammation, foods, and chronic diseases, especially

atherosclerosis, arthritis, and cancer. Populations of people who

follow starch-based diets with fruits and vegetables show strong

evidence of reduced inflammation in their bodies based on blood tests

(C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin 6, E-selectin, soluble

intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (sICAM-1), and soluble vascular cell

adhesion molecule 1 (sVCAM-1).1-4 These same people also have much

less heart disease, arthritis, and cancer than do populations of

people who consume diets high in animal (saturated) fats and trans

fats.5-6 The foods themselves do not directly change these

inflammatory markers. The elevations in these blood factors are the

body's response to the injury caused by the foods.

 

As an example, C-reactive protein (CRP), measured by a blood test, is

a very sensitive indicator of inflammation going on anywhere in the

body. It is non-specific-in other words, it does not tell you

the source of the inflammation-a rise could be from an infection in

your toe, arthritis in your knuckles, a bad cold, or the trauma of a

motorcycle accident. C-reactive protein provides non-specific

information similar to an elevation of the body temperature, called a

"fever." When the walls of your arteries are inflamed during

the active phases of atherosclerosis, C-reactive protein

rises-predicting a higher future risk of artery failure, commonly

known as a heart attack or a stroke.7

 

Spontaneous Healing of Artery Disease

 

In the case of artery disease, like Robert Cross described above, the

meat, poultry, and dairy foods he ate damaged his arteries over six

decades. Many mechanisms for these micro pinpricks of injury have been

described, including free-radical damage from oxidized fat and

cholesterol, attacks from the body's own antibodies, and poisonings

from chemicals, like those from tobacco and the environment.8-10 The

repeated injuries result in sores (think of them as pimples or

pustules) covering the inner surfaces of the arteries' walls.

Now that you understand the inflammatory nature of artery disease, you

know the reason why a healthier diet, based on plant foods, lowers

C-reactive protein levels.11-13 This diet stops repeated injuries

and allows the sores to heal. You also understand why

low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets, like the Atkins diet, increase

inflammation as indicated by a rise in C-reactive protein (CRP).14

 

The life-threatening event (a heart attack or a stroke) occurs when

one of these pustules ruptures; causing a blood clot to

form-occluding the flow of blood to vital tissues, such as the heart

or brain.15

 

Common Inflammatory Diseases of Arteries

 

Macular degeneration

Hearing loss

Strokes

Heart attacks

Aneurysms

Kidney failure

Bowel infarction

Degenerative disks

Claudication (legs)

Gangrene

Impotence

Other infarctions

 

Spontaneous Healing of Inflammatory Arthritis

 

"About thirteen years ago, at the age of 46, I (Phyllis Heaphy)

began suffering with pain after standing still for long periods of

time. Soon thereafter, I began experiencing 'traveling'

inflammation to various parts of my body: one week it would be in one

or two fingers, the next week in one of my wrists, a month later in my

shoulder. The turning point was when I spent two days unable to

walk-I cried as I tried to make my way across the room. The

rheumatologist I visited in September 2000 gave me a diagnosis of

mild-to-moderate rheumatoid arthritis (an inflammatory arthritis). It

sounded like a death sentence. She prescribed methotrexate, a powerful

immune-system-suppressing drug often used to treat cancer. One

day I stumbled onto a reference to Dr. McDougall's ultra-low-fat vegan

diet for arthritis. The results were nothing short of miraculous:

within a few days of eliminating unhealthy foods I became almost

(perhaps 90%) pain-free, and I have continued to improve ever since.

Today I remain essentially pain-free and on no medication."

Read more about Phyllis Heaphy.

 

Unhealthy foods cause the production antibodies that in turn attack

the body's own tissues. These diseases, where the body attacks

itself, are referred to as autoimmune diseases. The process is known

as molecular mimicry.16 In Phyllis's case micro pinprick

injuries resulted in hot, swollen, painful joints, a condition

properly referred to as inflammatory arthritis. The problem begins

with damage to the inside lining of the intestines forming a "leaky

gut." Now foreign proteins, such as cow-milk proteins, can pass into

the blood stream.17 The body makes antibodies to these "invading

milk proteins." Unfortunately, the attack is not isolated to the

cows-milk proteins. Proteins of similar structure are also attacked in

the person's joints, causing inflammation with swelling and

crippling pain. Changing to a starch-based diet removes the animal

proteins from the intestines immediately, and eventually heals the

leaky gut. Inflammation begins to subside in four to seven days.

Within four months over 70% of patients with inflammatory arthritis

are dramatically improved or cured.18

 

Common Autoimmune Diseases

 

Rheumatoid arthritis

Lupus

Psoriatic arthritis

Ankylosing spondylitis

Pernicious Anemia

Type-1 diabetes

Thyroiditis (most hypothyroidism)

Vitiligo

Ulcerative Colitis

Crohn's Disease

Multiple Sclerosis

Uveitis

Polymyositis

Dermatomyositis

Scleroderma

 

Spontaneous Healing of Cancer

 

"For all my 47 years, I (Ruth Heidrich) thought I was extremely

healthy! After all, at that time (1982), I'd been a daily runner for

14 years, had run 3 marathons, and ate what I considered a very

healthy diet-lots of chicken, fish, and low-fat dairy. Little did I

know there was an insidious cancer growing in my right breast. When it

grew to the size of a golf ball, I was rushed into surgery. I was then

told it was invasive cancer, and later, that it had spread, not only

throughout the whole breast but also involved my bones and one lung.

While recovering from the surgery I saw a newspaper item asking for

volunteers for a breast cancer/diet research study. I volunteered and

was soon convinced that Dr. McDougall was on the right track and left

his office on a low-fat vegan diet. Since my diagnosis in 1982, I have

completed the Ironman 6 times, run 67 marathons, won over 1000 racing

trophies, and been declared " One of the Ten Fittest Women in

North America " in 1999. I have a Fitness Age of 32 although

chronologically am 74!" Read more about Ruth

Heidrich.

 

Cancers are initiated and promoted by unhealthy components of the

high-meat Western diet.19 Vegetarians are generally much healthier

with lower cancer rates than others living in the same communities.20

As discussed, repeated injuries from unhealthy foods are followed by

inflammation. Chronic inflammation is implicated in all stages of

cancer-initiation, promotion and progression.21 The relationship is

best seen in chronic inflammatory diseases; including ulcerative

colitis, gastritis, pancreatitis, prostatitis, endometriosis,

thyroiditis, bronchitis, mastitis (milk ducts), and microbial

infections, which are often complicated by cancers in their respective

organs.21 Many mechanisms for the micro pinprick injuries that

initiate and promote cancer have been described, including injuries

from radiation, and poisonings from chemicals found in tobacco

products and foods. Even though doctors and patients commonly

believe otherwise, in the case of cancer the body does not abandon its

whole body efforts for spontaneous healing.

 

Cancers, even when spread throughout the body, can be reversed as seen

in the case of Ruth Heidrich. A recent review reported 32 cases

of complete remission from metastatic breast cancer.22 Under the

microscope, evidence of ongoing spontaneous healing in colonies of

breast cancer cells is clearly observed.23 Inflammation results in the

destruction of these aberrant cells and their replacement with scar

tissue. A recent study of women published in the Archives of

Internal Medicine found that about 22% of mammography-detected

invasive breast cancers underwent spontaneous remission-in other

words, are healed-over a six-year period of study.24 Advanced

prostate, colon, melanoma, brain cancer (neuroblastoma), and kidney

cancer have also been reported to spontaneously disappear without

treatment. Precancerous changes in the female uterine cervix and

colon polyps also regress. The benefits of a healthy diet were

not directly tested during any of these observations. Common

sense and available research says that better nourished, healthier

people are more likely to be cured by spontaneous healing.25

 

Reported Spontaneous Regressions (Healing) of Common Cancers

 

Breast

Prostate

Colon

Brain

Kidney

Melanoma

 

The Solution to Chronic Disease Is Simple and Easy To Explain

 

Stop the repeated injuries. Identifying the sources of these

injuries is easy. Unhealthy foods, and "bad habits"

(smoking, coffee, alcohol, etc.), have been known since antiquity to

be at the root of human maladies. The real challenge is in changing

lifelong behaviors. This change begins by telling a simple

truth. The Starch Solution takes one giant step forward for health and

healing. Expect dramatic results from your new diet. You

won't be disappointed.

 

References:

 

1) Nettleton JA, Steffen LM, Mayer-Davis EJ, Jenny NS, Jiang R,

Herrington DM, Jacobs DR Jr. Dietary patterns are associated with

biochemical markers of inflammation and endothelial activation in the

Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). Am J Clin Nutr. 2006

Jun;83(6):1369-79.

 

2) Esposito K, Marfella R, Ciotola M, Di Palo C, Giugliano F,

Giugliano G, D'Armiento M, D'Andrea F, Giugliano D. Effect of a

mediterranean-style diet on endothelial dysfunction and markers of

vascular inflammation in the metabolic syndrome: a randomized trial.

JAMA. 2004 Sep 22;292(12):1440-6.

 

3) Giugliano D, Ceriello A, Esposito K. The effects of diet on

inflammation: emphasis on the metabolic syndrome. J Am Coll Cardiol.

2006 Aug 15;48(4):677-85

 

4) Lopez-Garcia E, Schulze MB, Fung TT, Meigs JB, Rifai N, Manson JE,

Hu FB. Major dietary patterns are related to plasma concentrations of

markers of inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. Am J Clin Nutr.

2004 Oct;80(4):1029-35.

 

5) Baer DJ, Judd JT, Clevidence BA, Tracy RP. Dietary fatty acids

affect plasma markers of inflammation in healthy men fed controlled

diets: a randomized crossover study. Am J Clin Nutr. 2004

Jun;79(6):969-73.

 

6) Lopez-Garcia E, Schulze MB, Meigs JB, Manson JE, Rifai N, Stampfer

MJ, Willett WC, Hu FB. Consumption of trans fatty acids is related to

plasma biomarkers of inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. J Nutr.

2005 Mar;135(3):562-6.

 

7) Calabrò P, Golia E, Yeh ET. CRP and the risk of atherosclerotic

events. Semin Immunopathol. 2009 May 5.

 

8) Bonomini F, Tengattini S, Fabiano A, Bianchi R, Rezzani R.

Atherosclerosis and oxidative stress. Histol Histopathol. 2008

Mar;23(3):381-90.

 

9) Muscari A, Puddu GM, Bozzoli C, Volta U, Sangiorgi Z, Bianchi FB,

Descovich GC, Puddu P. Serum IgA antibodies to apoproteins and

milk-proteins in severe atherosclerosis. Ann Ital Med Int. 1992

Jan-Mar;7(1):7-12.

 

10) O'Toole TE, Conklin DJ, Bhatnagar A. .Environmental risk factors

for heart disease. Rev Environ Health. 2008 Jul-Sep;23(3):167-202

 

11) King DE, Egan BM, Geesey ME. Relation of dietary fat and

fiber to elevation of C-reactive protein. Am J Cardiol. 2003 Dec

1;92(11):1335-9.

 

12) Chen CW, Lin YL, Lin TK, Lin CT, Chen BC, Lin CL. Total

cardiovascular risk profile of Taiwanese vegetarians. Eur J Clin

Nutr. 2008 Jan;62(1):138-44.

 

13) Ma Y, Griffith JA, Chasan-Taber L, Olendzki BC, Jackson E, Stanek

EJ 3rd, Li W, Pagoto SL, Hafner AR, Ockene IS. Association between

dietary fiber and serum C-reactive protein. Am J Clin Nutr. 2006

Apr;83(4):760-6.

 

14) Rankin JW, Turpyn AD. Low carbohydrate, high fat diet increases

C-reactive protein during weight loss. J Am Coll Nutr. 2007

Apr;26(2):163-9.

 

15) Shah PK. Inflammation and plaque vulnerability. Cardiovasc Drugs

Ther. 2009 Feb;23(1):31-40.

 

16) Leech S. Molecular mimicry in autoimmune disease. Arch Dis Child.

1998 Nov;79(5):448-51.

 

17) Pérez-Maceda B, López-Bote JP, Langa C, Bernabeu C. Antibodies

to dietary antigens in rheumatoid arthritis--possible molecular

mimicry mechanism. Clin Chim Acta. 1991 Dec 16;203(2-3):153-65.

 

18) McDougall J. Diet: Only Hope for Arthritis.

http://drmcdougall.com/med_hot_arthritis_diet.html

 

19) Sinha R, Cross AJ, Graubard BI, Leitzmann MF, Schatzkin A.

Meat intake and mortality: a prospective study of over half a million

people. Arch Intern Med. 2009 Mar 23;169(6):562-71.

 

20) Fraser GE. Vegetarian diets: what do we know of their effects on

common chronic diseases? Am J Clin Nutr. 2009

May;89(5):1607S-1612S.

 

21) Kundu JK, Surh YJ. Inflammation: gearing the journey to cancer.

Mutat Res. 2008 Jul-Aug;659(1-2):15-30.

 

22) Larsen SU, Rose C. Spontaneous remission of breast cancer. A

literature review. Ugeskr Laeger. 1999 Jun 28;161(26):4001-4.

 

23) Horii R, Akiyama F, Kasumi F, Koike M, Sakamoto G. Spontaneous "

healing " of breast cancer. Breast Cancer. 2005;12(2):140-4.

 

24) Zahl PH, Maehlen J, Welch HG. The natural history of invasive

breast cancers detected by screening mammography. Arch Intern Med.

2008 Nov 24;168(21):2311-6.

 

25) Kellen E, Vansant G, Christiaens MR, Neven P, Van Limbergen E.

Lifestyle changes and breast cancer prognosis: a review. Breast Cancer

Res Treat. 2009 Mar;114(1):13-22.

 

You may

to this free McDougall Newsletter at http://www.drmcdougall.com

 

2009 John McDougall

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It's good to have stories to tell people when they are doubting the vegan diet.

 

Jo

 

, yarrow wrote:

>

> http://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2009nl/may/healing.htm

>

> A Starch-based Diet Supports Spontaneous Healing:

> Atherosclerosis, Arthritis, and Sometimes Cancer

>

> " I (Robert Cross, attorney from Sacramento,

> California) had a follow-up radioactive heart

> scan done today, May 5, 2009, and an appointment

> with the cardiologist immediately afterwards to

> discuss the results. My last such test had been

> in January of 2008. That one had shown a large

> region of mild-to-moderate perfusion deficit

> extending along the inferior and lateral walls of

> my heart. I had experienced chest pain early on

> in the treadmill portion of this test, and had

> had difficulty getting to the 85% of predicted

> maximum heart rate for my age of 62. My doctor

> had recommended medication, an angiogram, and

> heart surgery (an angioplasty). I was scared. I

> immediately went on the low-fat, starch-based

> diet.

>

> " From almost the day I started the program, I

> have had no chest pain, even with exercise. I am

> off my cholesterol meds and my " bad " LDL

> cholesterol has dropped from 212 mg/dL to 60

> mg/dL. I am off my blood pressure medications,

> and today I was 110/75 mmHg. I also stopped my

> diabetes medications and my last hemoglobin A1c

> was normal (around 6.0%). I feel WAY BETTER in

> every way I can think of. But I was nervous about

> what today's test would show.

>

> " Today, during the radioactive heart scan, I had

> no pain on the treadmill, even though I took my

> heart rate to 160 beats per minute, which is over

> my predicted maximum-and I knew I had more in me.

> The large deficit that showed last time was

> completely gone. There was remaining only a small

> deficit that would now be classified as minor.

> The doctor would not go so far as to say that the

> results were normal, but he did say that they

> were only mildly abnormal. I could see that he

> was working hard to say that it was not normal-he

> does not want me to be feeling too confident

> (don't worry, I won't be celebrating with a milk

> shake). My doctor and I agreed, without question

> that the reversal was large and obvious, and I am

> so pleased with that. "

>

> Let's Begin with A Colossal Example of Spontaneous Healing

>

> As a medical doctor, I (John McDougall) have had

> a chance to witness the power of spontaneous

> (self-generated, arising from a natural

> inclination) healing thousands of times; but

> nothing has been more impressive than the

> recovery that follows massive trauma. During my

> early training years, working at Queen's Medical

> Center in Hawaii, a young man mangled in a

> motorcycle accident arrived through the emergency

> room doors one evening. His splintered femur

> bone stuck through the flesh of his left thigh, a

> 12-inch long gash across his left forearm was

> streaming bright red blood, and the skin on his

> left cheek and forehead had been scraped off

> during his slide across the pavement only minutes

> before his arrival. X-rays showed his skull was

> fractured and many ribs were broken. I thought,

> " How could he ever survive? " Medical intervention

> was crucial-his bones were straightened and his

> wounds cleaned and sewn. However, without his

> body's innate abilities to repair this massive

> damage, all would have been lost.

>

> Moments after his motorcycle accident his body

> had begun the healing processes. Platelets and

> blood clotting proteins activated, coagulating

> his blood and plugging millions of leaking

> vessels. During the following hours inflammatory

> cells (commonly called white blood cells)

> migrated into his open wounds, defending them

> against infection. Fluids collected within his

> torn flesh and around the broken bones. The

> swelling of his thigh, arm, and face would last

> for weeks. Pain kept him still, preventing

> movements that could cause further injuries. Soon

> restoration of the damaged tissues began with the

> laying down of new structural materials by cells

> known as fibroblasts in the soft tissues and

> osteoblasts in the broken bones. Over months

> replicator cells produced new muscle, skin, bone,

> and scars, and remodeled his wounds to cause his

> body to look and function as close to normal as

> possible.

>

> Within a week he was walking on crutches. Ten

> days post-accident the stitches were removed from

> his thigh and arm. The swelling and redness

> surrounding his wounds took four weeks to fully

> subside. Six weeks after the accident the

> coagulated blood (scabs) fell off his face

> revealing pink skin with new hair follicles

> filling in his beard. The broken ribs were

> stable and painless after seven weeks. Three

> months after this near-death experience he was

> walking on his own without a limp. Most of the

> pain was gone, but the memories were fresh. He

> sold his motorcycle in order to avoid a repeat of

> this experience.

>

> His transition from broken, bleeding, and dying

> to health in three months was nothing short of a

> miracle. I reasoned then, and I know for sure

> now, that if a body can heal after these kinds of

> massive injuries, then, given a chance, it can

> heal from most any illness-even serious chronic

> illnesses, like heart disease, arthritis, and

> sometimes cancers, that have plagued my patients

> for years.

>

> The Secret to Recovery: Stop the Repeated Injuries

>

> The example above was due to a force like a

> single blast from a sledgehammer; whereas the

> people I care for, those with chronic disease,

> can be thought of as suffering from thousands of

> " micro pinprick " injuries to their arteries,

> joints, and all other tissues over prolonged

> periods of time. Even though the force,

> frequency, and means of impact differ; the

> mechanisms of repair are still the same, whether

> the injuries occur once or a million times.

>

> If your health is getting worse it is not because

> your body is failing you-efforts to heal never

> stop-not for a moment. The reason for your

> continued decline is because the damage is

> ongoing. For disease to progress, injury must

> outpace healing. Reversing disease is simply a

> matter of turning this scenario around. To be

> specific, stop the ongoing injury, which is

> usually self-induced. (However, there is a point

> reached where disease is irreversible, because

> the injury is too severe and/or the body is too

> worn out to recover. Fortunately, few of my

> patients are in that much trouble.)

>

> Let's consider some familiar examples of

> self-induced injuries and the body's efforts to

> heal. A cigarette smoker inhales toxic gaseous

> particles 20 and more times a day. With each

> puff, the lungs become more irritated and

> inflamed. They fight back by coughing and

> producing mucous in order to remove the poisons.

> Because of the addictive properties of the

> tobacco, the injury continues hour after hour,

> day after day, year after year. Eventually, the

> some of the red, swollen lung dies and is

> replaced by non-functioning scar tissues. The

> result is diminished lung capacity (emphysema).

> Chronic inflammation can also lay the foundation

> for lung cancer. Serious lung disease is not

> inevitable. Many smokers gain wisdom and

> strength, and are able to quit injuring

> themselves before the damage is irreversible-the

> lungs heal and breathing recovers. Toxic damage

> to the liver by alcohol, and overexposure of the

> skin to excess sunlight are other everyday

> examples of chronic injuries due to unwise

> behaviors. In these cases also, the body responds

> with efforts to heal, beginning with

> inflammation. Greater recovery is expected the

> sooner the repeated injury is stopped.

>

> A Starch-based Diet Supports Spontaneous Healing

>

> Over 75% of the chronic illnesses in developed

> countries are due to repeated injuries from the

> fork and spoon. Three and more times a day

> damaging quantities of fat, protein, cholesterol,

> and chemicals are ingested at the " dinner

> table " -better known these days as the " bag of

> fast food. " The beef, chicken, cheese, refined

> flours, and sugars are sources of present day

> malnutrition-excesses and deficiencies of vital

> nutrients plague these foods.

>

> Replacement with starch corrects the malnutrition

> with a perfect balance of fats, proteins,

> carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals, fibers,

> phytates, and other phytochemicals that support

> the body's powers to heal and stay healthy. Rice,

> corn, potatoes, sweet potatoes, and beans are

> also devoid of injurious substances: dietary

> cholesterol, harmful (saturated and trans) fats,

> chemical toxins, allergy-inducing proteins, and

> much more.

>

> Blood Tests Show Signs of Inflammation

>

> There is much discussion these days in the

> scientific journals and the lay press about

> inflammation, foods, and chronic diseases,

> especially atherosclerosis, arthritis, and

> cancer. Populations of people who follow

> starch-based diets with fruits and vegetables

> show strong evidence of reduced inflammation in

> their bodies based on blood tests (C-reactive

> protein (CRP), interleukin 6, E-selectin, soluble

> intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (sICAM-1), and

> soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule 1

> (sVCAM-1).1-4 These same people also have much

> less heart disease, arthritis, and cancer than do

> populations of people who consume diets high in

> animal (saturated) fats and trans fats.5-6 The

> foods themselves do not directly change these

> inflammatory markers. The elevations in these

> blood factors are the body's response to the

> injury caused by the foods.

>

> As an example, C-reactive protein (CRP), measured

> by a blood test, is a very sensitive indicator of

> inflammation going on anywhere in the body. It

> is non-specific-in other words, it does not tell

> you the source of the inflammation-a rise could

> be from an infection in your toe, arthritis in

> your knuckles, a bad cold, or the trauma of a

> motorcycle accident. C-reactive protein provides

> non-specific information similar to an elevation

> of the body temperature, called a " fever. " When

> the walls of your arteries are inflamed during

> the active phases of atherosclerosis, C-reactive

> protein rises-predicting a higher future risk of

> artery failure, commonly known as a heart attack

> or a stroke.7

>

> Spontaneous Healing of Artery Disease

>

> In the case of artery disease, like Robert Cross

> described above, the meat, poultry, and dairy

> foods he ate damaged his arteries over six

> decades. Many mechanisms for these micro

> pinpricks of injury have been described,

> including free-radical damage from oxidized fat

> and cholesterol, attacks from the body's own

> antibodies, and poisonings from chemicals, like

> those from tobacco and the environment.8-10 The

> repeated injuries result in sores (think of them

> as pimples or pustules) covering the inner

> surfaces of the arteries' walls. Now that you

> understand the inflammatory nature of artery

> disease, you know the reason why a healthier

> diet, based on plant foods, lowers C-reactive

> protein levels.11-13 This diet stops repeated

> injuries and allows the sores to heal. You also

> understand why low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets,

> like the Atkins diet, increase inflammation as

> indicated by a rise in C-reactive protein (CRP).14

>

> The life-threatening event (a heart attack or a

> stroke) occurs when one of these pustules

> ruptures; causing a blood clot to form-occluding

> the flow of blood to vital tissues, such as the

> heart or brain.15

>

> Common Inflammatory Diseases of Arteries

>

> Macular degeneration

> Hearing loss

> Strokes

> Heart attacks

> Aneurysms

> Kidney failure

> Bowel infarction

> Degenerative disks

> Claudication (legs)

> Gangrene

> Impotence

> Other infarctions

>

> Spontaneous Healing of Inflammatory Arthritis

>

> " About thirteen years ago, at the age of 46, I

> (Phyllis Heaphy) began suffering with pain after

> standing still for long periods of time. Soon

> thereafter, I began experiencing 'traveling'

> inflammation to various parts of my body: one

> week it would be in one or two fingers, the next

> week in one of my wrists, a month later in my

> shoulder. The turning point was when I spent two

> days unable to walk-I cried as I tried to make my

> way across the room. The rheumatologist I visited

> in September 2000 gave me a diagnosis of

> mild-to-moderate rheumatoid arthritis (an

> inflammatory arthritis). It sounded like a death

> sentence. She prescribed methotrexate, a powerful

> immune-system-suppressing drug often used to

> treat cancer. One day I stumbled onto a

> reference to Dr. McDougall's ultra-low-fat vegan

> diet for arthritis. The results were nothing

> short of miraculous: within a few days of

> eliminating unhealthy foods I became almost

> (perhaps 90%) pain-free, and I have continued to

> improve ever since. Today I remain essentially

> pain-free and on no medication. " Read more about

> Phyllis Heaphy.

>

> Unhealthy foods cause the production antibodies

> that in turn attack the body's own tissues. These

> diseases, where the body attacks itself, are

> referred to as autoimmune diseases. The process

> is known as molecular mimicry.16 In Phyllis's

> case micro pinprick injuries resulted in hot,

> swollen, painful joints, a condition properly

> referred to as inflammatory arthritis. The

> problem begins with damage to the inside lining

> of the intestines forming a " leaky gut. " Now

> foreign proteins, such as cow-milk proteins, can

> pass into the blood stream.17 The body makes

> antibodies to these " invading milk proteins. "

> Unfortunately, the attack is not isolated to the

> cows-milk proteins. Proteins of similar structure

> are also attacked in the person's joints, causing

> inflammation with swelling and crippling pain.

> Changing to a starch-based diet removes the

> animal proteins from the intestines immediately,

> and eventually heals the leaky gut. Inflammation

> begins to subside in four to seven days. Within

> four months over 70% of patients with

> inflammatory arthritis are dramatically improved

> or cured.18

>

> Common Autoimmune Diseases

>

> Rheumatoid arthritis

> Lupus

> Psoriatic arthritis

> Ankylosing spondylitis

> Pernicious Anemia

> Type-1 diabetes

> Thyroiditis (most hypothyroidism)

> Vitiligo

> Ulcerative Colitis

> Crohn's Disease

> Multiple Sclerosis

> Uveitis

> Polymyositis

> Dermatomyositis

> Scleroderma

>

> Spontaneous Healing of Cancer

>

> " For all my 47 years, I (Ruth Heidrich) thought I

> was extremely healthy! After all, at that time

> (1982), I'd been a daily runner for 14 years, had

> run 3 marathons, and ate what I considered a very

> healthy diet-lots of chicken, fish, and low-fat

> dairy. Little did I know there was an insidious

> cancer growing in my right breast. When it grew

> to the size of a golf ball, I was rushed into

> surgery. I was then told it was invasive cancer,

> and later, that it had spread, not only

> throughout the whole breast but also involved my

> bones and one lung. While recovering from the

> surgery I saw a newspaper item asking for

> volunteers for a breast cancer/diet research

> study. I volunteered and was soon convinced that

> Dr. McDougall was on the right track and left his

> office on a low-fat vegan diet. Since my

> diagnosis in 1982, I have completed the Ironman 6

> times, run 67 marathons, won over 1000 racing

> trophies, and been declared " One of the Ten

> Fittest Women in North America " in 1999. I have a

> Fitness Age of 32 although chronologically am

> 74! " Read more about Ruth Heidrich.

>

> Cancers are initiated and promoted by unhealthy

> components of the high-meat Western diet.19

> Vegetarians are generally much healthier with

> lower cancer rates than others living in the same

> communities.20 As discussed, repeated injuries

> from unhealthy foods are followed by

> inflammation. Chronic inflammation is implicated

> in all stages of cancer-initiation, promotion and

> progression.21 The relationship is best seen in

> chronic inflammatory diseases; including

> ulcerative colitis, gastritis, pancreatitis,

> prostatitis, endometriosis, thyroiditis,

> bronchitis, mastitis (milk ducts), and microbial

> infections, which are often complicated by

> cancers in their respective organs.21 Many

> mechanisms for the micro pinprick injuries that

> initiate and promote cancer have been described,

> including injuries from radiation, and poisonings

> from chemicals found in tobacco products and

> foods. Even though doctors and patients commonly

> believe otherwise, in the case of cancer the body

> does not abandon its whole body efforts for

> spontaneous healing.

>

> Cancers, even when spread throughout the body,

> can be reversed as seen in the case of Ruth

> Heidrich. A recent review reported 32 cases of

> complete remission from metastatic breast

> cancer.22 Under the microscope, evidence of

> ongoing spontaneous healing in colonies of breast

> cancer cells is clearly observed.23 Inflammation

> results in the destruction of these aberrant

> cells and their replacement with scar tissue. A

> recent study of women published in the Archives

> of Internal Medicine found that about 22% of

> mammography-detected invasive breast cancers

> underwent spontaneous remission-in other words,

> are healed-over a six-year period of study.24

> Advanced prostate, colon, melanoma, brain cancer

> (neuroblastoma), and kidney cancer have also been

> reported to spontaneously disappear without

> treatment. Precancerous changes in the female

> uterine cervix and colon polyps also regress. The

> benefits of a healthy diet were not directly

> tested during any of these observations. Common

> sense and available research says that better

> nourished, healthier people are more likely to be

> cured by spontaneous healing.25

>

> Reported Spontaneous Regressions (Healing) of Common Cancers

>

> Breast

> Prostate

> Colon

> Brain

> Kidney

> Melanoma

>

> The Solution to Chronic Disease Is Simple and Easy To Explain

>

> Stop the repeated injuries. Identifying the

> sources of these injuries is easy. Unhealthy

> foods, and " bad habits " (smoking, coffee,

> alcohol, etc.), have been known since antiquity

> to be at the root of human maladies. The real

> challenge is in changing lifelong behaviors.

> This change begins by telling a simple truth. The

> Starch Solution takes one giant step forward for

> health and healing. Expect dramatic results from

> your new diet. You won't be disappointed.

>

> References:

>

> 1) Nettleton JA, Steffen LM, Mayer-Davis EJ,

> Jenny NS, Jiang R, Herrington DM, Jacobs DR Jr.

> Dietary patterns are associated with biochemical

> markers of inflammation and endothelial

> activation in the Multi-Ethnic Study of

> Atherosclerosis (MESA). Am J Clin Nutr. 2006

> Jun;83(6):1369-79.

>

> 2) Esposito K, Marfella R, Ciotola M, Di Palo C,

> Giugliano F, Giugliano G, D'Armiento M, D'Andrea

> F, Giugliano D. Effect of a mediterranean-style

> diet on endothelial dysfunction and markers of

> vascular inflammation in the metabolic syndrome:

> a randomized trial. JAMA. 2004 Sep

> 22;292(12):1440-6.

>

> 3) Giugliano D, Ceriello A, Esposito K. The

> effects of diet on inflammation: emphasis on the

> metabolic syndrome. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006 Aug

> 15;48(4):677-85

>

> 4) Lopez-Garcia E, Schulze MB, Fung TT, Meigs JB,

> Rifai N, Manson JE, Hu FB. Major dietary patterns

> are related to plasma concentrations of markers

> of inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. Am J

> Clin Nutr. 2004 Oct;80(4):1029-35.

>

> 5) Baer DJ, Judd JT, Clevidence BA, Tracy RP.

> Dietary fatty acids affect plasma markers of

> inflammation in healthy men fed controlled diets:

> a randomized crossover study. Am J Clin Nutr.

> 2004 Jun;79(6):969-73.

>

> 6) Lopez-Garcia E, Schulze MB, Meigs JB, Manson

> JE, Rifai N, Stampfer MJ, Willett WC, Hu FB.

> Consumption of trans fatty acids is related to

> plasma biomarkers of inflammation and endothelial

> dysfunction. J Nutr. 2005 Mar;135(3):562-6.

>

> 7) Calabrò P, Golia E, Yeh ET. CRP and the risk

> of atherosclerotic events. Semin Immunopathol.

> 2009 May 5.

>

> 8) Bonomini F, Tengattini S, Fabiano A, Bianchi

> R, Rezzani R. Atherosclerosis and oxidative

> stress. Histol Histopathol. 2008 Mar;23(3):381-90.

>

> 9) Muscari A, Puddu GM, Bozzoli C, Volta U,

> Sangiorgi Z, Bianchi FB, Descovich GC, Puddu P.

> Serum IgA antibodies to apoproteins and

> milk-proteins in severe atherosclerosis. Ann Ital

> Med Int. 1992 Jan-Mar;7(1):7-12.

>

> 10) O'Toole TE, Conklin DJ, Bhatnagar A.

> .Environmental risk factors for heart disease.

> Rev Environ Health. 2008 Jul-Sep;23(3):167-202

>

> 11) King DE, Egan BM, Geesey ME. Relation of

> dietary fat and fiber to elevation of C-reactive

> protein. Am J Cardiol. 2003 Dec 1;92(11):1335-9.

>

> 12) Chen CW, Lin YL, Lin TK, Lin CT, Chen BC, Lin

> CL. Total cardiovascular risk profile of

> Taiwanese vegetarians. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2008

> Jan;62(1):138-44.

>

> 13) Ma Y, Griffith JA, Chasan-Taber L, Olendzki

> BC, Jackson E, Stanek EJ 3rd, Li W, Pagoto SL,

> Hafner AR, Ockene IS. Association between dietary

> fiber and serum C-reactive protein. Am J Clin

> Nutr. 2006 Apr;83(4):760-6.

>

> 14) Rankin JW, Turpyn AD. Low carbohydrate, high

> fat diet increases C-reactive protein during

> weight loss. J Am Coll Nutr. 2007 Apr;26(2):163-9.

>

> 15) Shah PK. Inflammation and plaque

> vulnerability. Cardiovasc Drugs Ther. 2009

> Feb;23(1):31-40.

>

> 16) Leech S. Molecular mimicry in autoimmune

> disease. Arch Dis Child. 1998 Nov;79(5):448-51.

>

> 17) Pérez-Maceda B, López-Bote JP, Langa C,

> Bernabeu C. Antibodies to dietary antigens in

> rheumatoid arthritis--possible molecular mimicry

> mechanism. Clin Chim Acta. 1991 Dec

> 16;203(2-3):153-65.

>

> 18) McDougall J. Diet: Only Hope for Arthritis.

> http://drmcdougall.com/med_hot_arthritis_diet.html

>

> 19) Sinha R, Cross AJ, Graubard BI, Leitzmann MF,

> Schatzkin A. Meat intake and mortality: a

> prospective study of over half a million people.

> Arch Intern Med. 2009 Mar 23;169(6):562-71.

>

> 20) Fraser GE. Vegetarian diets: what do we know

> of their effects on common chronic diseases? Am J

> Clin Nutr. 2009 May;89(5):1607S-1612S.

>

> 21) Kundu JK, Surh YJ. Inflammation: gearing the

> journey to cancer. Mutat Res. 2008

> Jul-Aug;659(1-2):15-30.

>

> 22) Larsen SU, Rose C. Spontaneous remission of

> breast cancer. A literature review. Ugeskr

> Laeger. 1999 Jun 28;161(26):4001-4.

>

> 23) Horii R, Akiyama F, Kasumi F, Koike M,

> Sakamoto G. Spontaneous " healing " of breast

> cancer. Breast Cancer. 2005;12(2):140-4.

>

> 24) Zahl PH, Maehlen J, Welch HG. The natural

> history of invasive breast cancers detected by

> screening mammography. Arch Intern Med. 2008 Nov

> 24;168(21):2311-6.

>

> 25) Kellen E, Vansant G, Christiaens MR, Neven P,

> Van Limbergen E. Lifestyle changes and breast

> cancer prognosis: a review. Breast Cancer Res

> Treat. 2009 Mar;114(1):13-22.

>

>

> You may to this free McDougall

> Newsletter at http://www.drmcdougall.com

>

>

> 2009 John McDougall

>

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Guest guest

So funny -- I sent this to a cousin, and she sent it on to her

sibling with the message " Maybe this will work for your broken

finger! "

 

Another (distant and melodramatic and younger) cousin sent back a

long rambling message about how she's counting her days and then " I

don't talk to the family about my illness. " I couldn't tell if she

was serious or, um, not.

 

People are so strange.

 

At 6:54 AM +0000 6/2/09, heartwerk wrote:

>It's good to have stories to tell people when they are doubting the

>vegan diet.

>

>Jo

>

> , yarrow wrote:

>>

>> http://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2009nl/may/healing.htm

>>

>> A Starch-based Diet Supports Spontaneous Healing:

>> Atherosclerosis, Arthritis, and Sometimes Cancer

>>

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Guest guest

Oh dear - mind you it might help the finger to mend quicker. Some people don't realise they are going on and on.

 

Jo

 

 

-

yarrow

Tuesday, June 02, 2009 10:55 AM

Re: spontaneous healing

 

 

So funny -- I sent this to a cousin, and she sent it on to her sibling with the message "Maybe this will work for your broken finger!"Another (distant and melodramatic and younger) cousin sent back a long rambling message about how she's counting her days and then "I don't talk to the family about my illness." I couldn't tell if she was serious or, um, not.People are so strange.At 6:54 AM +0000 6/2/09, heartwerk wrote:>It's good to have stories to tell people when they are doubting the >vegan diet.>>Jo>> , yarrow wrote:>>>> http://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2009nl/may/healing.htm>>>> A Starch-based Diet Supports Spontaneous Healing:>> Atherosclerosis, Arthritis, and Sometimes Cancer>>

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